With the GPU's of these days, it may be a matter of minutes to crack a password using a dictionary attack/rainbow tables.

Fortunately, it's very easy to change the password hashing. I will change the password hashing of vBulletin to use BCrypt, a much better algorithm. The password hashing will look like this at the end of this guide:

Requirements for this guide:
- Access to the FTP or permission to edit .php files on the server.
- PHP version of 5.5+ (we make use of the password_hash function)
- You must update all of the passwords in the current database.
- vBulletin 4.2.2 (this modification has been made on 4.2.2)
- Database access in the form of SSH/PHPMyAdmin or any other database manager tool

Create a backup of the files we are going to edit first so you can always restore it in case it goes wrong!

Step 1: modify password column type

First things first, we have to modify the type of the password column in the user table.
You can either do this in PHPMyAdmin by changing it to char(60) or by executing the following query:

We have to modify this function since there's a check to see if the password matches the current username, which is not allowed by default.

Step 4: update all passwords in the user table

The only downside of this is that we have to update all passwords in the database.
But no worries, no one will have to change or update their password to make this work since we use the old password hashing in BCrypt.

Please make a backup of your database or user table before doing this so you can restore it in case it does not work as intended!

Create a file in the root of your forum and name it something like update_passwords.php. Contents of the file:

This will update all of the current password hashes to use BCrypt.
In case the script timed out, just run it again or change the script execution timeout.

Step 5: verifying functionality

Now try to login onto your forum and see if that works, in case you get an incorrect username/password error, it means you did something wrong in this guide.
In case it works, try to update your password and relog to see if that part works as well.

I tested the login, registration, remember me checkbox and changing password function on a local test forum which seemed to work fine.

Support will be provided here (comment box). I'll answer the most basic questions here at vbulletin.org.

A problem I see here is that the browser still transmits the password with the md5 hashes and an eavesdropper can still intercept them and crack them. All your advanced hashing happens on the server after it receives the md5 hashes. What you could do is replace the original vbulletin_md5.js file with one that does the md5 and bcrypt hashing . Then the password is better encrypted in transit. I think you would have to use vBulletin's original code and then add more code (available as open source) to further encrypt both versions of the hashes. Once this is done you could skip the PHP code that bcrypt hashes on the server

There's a further thing to consider though, it seems to me that there's a problem with vbulletin_md5.js and older (and maybe newer) versions of IE, so it doesn't encrypt at all. You'll have to check this out with various browsers. There's open source md5 javascript available and you could copy the vbulletin code that handles the difference between vb_login_md5password and vb_login_md5password_utf into the new md5 algorithm.

A problem I see here is that the browser still transmits the password with the md5 hashes and an eavesdropper can still intercept them and crack them. All your advanced hashing happens on the server after it receives the md5 hashes. What you could do is replace the original vbulletin_md5.js file with one that does the md5 and bcrypt hashing . Then the password is better encrypted in transit. I think you would have to use vBulletin's original code and then add more code (available as open source) to further encrypt both versions of the hashes. Once this is done you could skip the PHP code that bcrypt hashes on the server

There's a further thing to consider though, it seems to me that there's a problem with vbulletin_md5.js and older (and maybe newer) versions of IE, so it don't encrypt at all. You'll have to check this out with various browsers. There's open source md5 javascript available and you could copy the vbulletin code that handles the difference between vb_login_md5password and vb_login_md5password_utf into the new md5 algorithm.

True, but this will be more difficult (because of cross-browser support if you want to implement other hashing methods with JavaScript). Also this is a reason why you should use HTTPS.